| Alexander Karschnia on Tue, 3 Feb 2015 01:30:29 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Fwd: The Greek elections? |
In Germany an appeal was started by Jürgen Link (editor of the
magazine kultuRRevolution), because the media-coverage of the Greek
elections has been extremly distorted:
http://appell-hellas.de/?page_id=105
The appeal is directed towards "German Greeks and Greek Germans", but
now it is also translated into English, so I guess the spectrum it
adresses has broadened.
Very interesting to see, how "Europe" begins to be a point of reference
also for the far left, for example in the mobilization to come to the
opening of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt/M. on March 18th:
http://www.thecommuneofeurope.org/
2015-01-28 11:10 GMT+01:00 Pavlos Hatzopoulos <phatzopoulos@gmail.com>:
> On 01/28/2015 02:44 AM, Flick Harrison wrote:
>> The militant nationalism that Tsipras displayed by visiting the
>> Resistance memorial makes me think Syriza is stupid, or talking to
>> the stupid. The fascist threat isn't rolling into Greece in
>> panzers; it's a few inches to the right of their coalition partners
>> ANEL. Maybe this theatrical bow to violence was actually intended
>> for a far right audience, either to attract them, or threaten them,
>> or both? Surely the Germans are inured to WWII references by now?
This is really too perverse a reading of this event. Syriza is
becoming the first truly European political party that has emerged in
the context of this freaky organisation we call the European Union.
One needs only to see how Syriza's political agenda is always-already
European. Its electoral success is inherently linked to the analysis
of the problem of Greek debt and of Troika austerity policies in
Greece as a European problem and to the imagining of building a
European movement against them. More so, it's proposed solution to
this problem is again inherently European: asking for a European
conference on debt to deal with the writing off of state debt in
several countries, demanding a new architecture for the Eurozone,
proposing some type of European new deal, etc. The worst case
scenario in the ongoing negotiations with the EU is that Syriza will be
offered some kind of compromise within the "national horizon" on easing the
Greek debt and the existing austerity policies, so that the larger
European problems can remain under the carpet. If Syriza takes this
possible deal, then it will be transformed to a regular national
political party.
<...>
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